The Hamlet of Caegurwen

These facts and observations are based on a reading/interpretation of the 1871 census transcription of that part of Llangiwg parish which covers the hamlet of Caegurwen.
The census transcriptions themselves are on Genuki.

Caegurwen was artificially divided into 3 sections for enumeration
purposes.The *approximate* position and extent of the 3 sections can be seen on this first
diagram linked below where I have superimposed theoretical boundaries in line with the section descriptions
in the census. (and corrected Llanddeusant to Llangadock). The second
diagram is the original, and is clearer as far as the hamlets are
concerned. Images3/Hamlets.gif
/ Images3/Hamlets.jpg

Statistics provided in the return itself include;

Total

Section 1

Section 2

Section 3

Households

341

107 (31%)

132 (38%)

102 (30%)

Male

795

238

285

272

Female

791

247

286

258

In very simplistic terms these figures produce an average of 4.65 persons per household - the latter term includes family, boarders, servants, visitors, other relatives etc

These figures (and diagram) show that the 3 sections aren't dramatically
different in size or population although section 2 is the more heavily
populated - it includes Waun Lesion and Lower Brynamman with the densely
populated Park Street. Section 3 includes most of Gwauncaegurwen village
- and
also the yet to be named fledgling village of CwmgorsSection 1 includes the part of the Cwmllynfell
area which is within this parish, and Hendreforgan

Where did people come from?

An analysis of just section 1 of Caegurwen hamlet (folio 61/73) containing just under 500 people comes up with this breakdown of the places shown under 'Where born';

GLA = 310
(64%)

CMN = 126
(26 %)

BRE = 40
(9%)

MON = 3

CGN = 1

PEM = 1

Sundry = not counted

Those born GLA are mostly from within Llangiwg parish itself
Those born BRE are almost all from Ystradgynlais
Those born CMN are mainly from the nearby parishes of Llandagock, Llandilo & Llandybie -
and mostly from Llangadock.

It should be borne in mind that the hamlet adjoins
the border with CMN, specifically Llangadock and Llandeilofawr - the village of Brynamman itself straddles three
parishes.

However, clearly many of those born in Llangiwg are children whose parents came from elsewhere - further analysis shows that if one just counts the
heads of families then the numbers are;

GLA

Llangiwg = 39 (36%)

Llangyfelach = 2

Other = 2

CMN

Llangadock = 19 (18%)

Llandilo = 8 (7%)

Llandybie = 4

Bettws = 1

Other = 11

BRE

Ystradgynlais = 10 (9%)

Other = 1

CGN = 1
PEM = 2
MON = 3

There are just over 100 households in this first Caegurwen section, co-incidentally, the above totals for GLA and CMN are exactly the same at 43 - with Llangiwg, GLA and Llangadock, CMN being the largest and next largest.

I'd previously felt that there might be a strong incidence of both husband and wife coming from the same parish, not so it seems.
I haven't extracted any figures to support it but my impression is that, apart from Llangiwg, there were only half a dozen at most couples from the exact same parish, quite a few from the same county, i.e.
CMN, but the majority came from different counties (usually CMN and GLA). The overall majority of couples appeared to both come from Llangiwg,
of course this is partly because the incoming element was a previous
generation.
It's interesting that most of the 'cross county line incomers' therefore arrived independently
in Llangiwg parish.

Naming patterns

An analysis of only the section 1 of Caegurwen hamlet (folio 61/73) containing just under 500 people comes up with this breakdown of the incidence of given names;

Male

John = 46 (19%)

William = 45 (19%)

David = 34

Thomas = 29

Richard = 7

Griffith = 6

Morgan = 6

Samuel = 5

Owen = 3

Daniel = 3

Isaac = 3

Female

Mary (Anne/Jane) = 50 (20%)

Ann(e) = 33 (13%)

Hannah = 26

Margaret (Anne) = 21

Elizabeth = 19

Jane = 19

Catherine = 13

Gwenllian = 13

Jennet = 12

Sarah = 7

Rachel = 6

Susannah = 3

No surprises there then - John & William; and Mary & Ann(e) were clear favourites.

Statistically, that leaves about 60/70 other entries spread out over many other given names which appear in ones and twos.

Apart from a few traditional 'double names' such as Mary Anne/Mary Jane & Margaret Anne, there were hardly any entries where the person had more than one given name.

Schooling

The normal age span for those children referred to as Scholars appears to be between 4 and 12.
But several females up to 18, one boy aged 2, are also shown as Scholars, the latter probably in error.

Main Occupations etc

These figures below relate to the whole of Caegurwen hamlet

Male;

Coal Mining (all jobs directly related) 285

Labourers 35

Farmers 30

Iron works 17

Blacksmiths 11

Carpenters 9

Tailors/drapers 7

Shoemakers 3

Clockmaker 1

Woollen manufacturer 1 (employing 3)

Police 1

Gateman (tollgate) 1

Female;

Servants (domestic & farm) 49

Paupers (usually widows) 26

Dressmakers 13

Laundress 3

Nurses 2

Patch miners (coal) 2

Both sexes;

Scholars 369 (over 100 in each section)

Pubs & Inns 9 (see below)

Shopkeepers 9 (see below)

On parish relief 8

Pubs/Inns 9

Section 1

Mountain Hare 66/29 - Catherine Samuel

Rock 71/83 - Jennet Jones

Section 2

Old Farmer's Arms 86/102 - Lewis Evans

New Farmer's Arms 86/103 - John Jones

21 Park St 82/56 - Morgan Evans

27 Park St 82/62 - David Jones

Section 3

Caegurwen Arms 98/59 - Magdalen Morgan

Star Inn 100/81 - David Thomas

Star Inn (New Star below Cwmnanthopkin) 102/99 - David Thomas

Shopkeepers 8 (all but 1 in section 2)

Butchers 4

Grocers 2

Shopkeeper 1

Stationer (?) 1

Toll gate

The Gate House is shown on the census between Pwllywrach and Blue Cottage,
the elderly gateman and his wife both originated from Devon

Shop Keepers etc

Most of the 8 'shops' were in section 2For example, the 4 butchers
were in Mount Pleasant (Flat House), Noiadd Cottage (near Tyrbach),
Gorsegoch (near Park St), Park St (Lower Brynamman)Of the 2 Grocers,
one was in Park St and the other at the Old Farmer's ArmsThe Shop keeper
was also in Park St

I'm a bit mystified that there were apparently no shops at all in
section 3 which includes the main part of Gwauncaegurwen village.I
understand that local farmers played a part, and people also grew
their own 'stuff' to an extent - but nevertheless there *were*
tradesmen in Lower Brynamman etc, just not the Waun/Cwmgors.

Farming

The whole hamlet of Caegurwen hamlet contains some 30 farmers; of
this 9 are in section 1, 7 in section 2, and 14 in section
3.

Of the 9 in the section 1 there are two relatively large farms of 120 and 125 acres respectively,
another of 59 acres, the rest range from 2 to 18 acres.There is no indication
of the type of farming carried out on these but the majority would
be small holdings carrying a cow or two, a couple of pigs, and some
chickens perhaps.

The 14 farms in section 3 are generally bigger
although not as big as the largest two in section 1. The section 3 acreages
are 40,-,36,45,50,60,63,60,41,60,60,30,112,80.These farms in section
3 are located around the lower slopes of Penlle'rfedwen and Mynydd Uchaf.
To my knowledge (in the C20th) farmers on the latter grazed cattle and
sheep
on the poorer quality common land on the mountain's higher slopes/plateau,
and I believe that in the C19th there would also have been horses and perhaps
some geese.I
think most such farmers would be described as 'hill farmers' these days.

Coal mining

The breakdown of the 285 employed in some aspect of coal mining in the
whole hamlet is fairly evenly spread with clusters of population with
a coal mine or two nearby;

Section 1 = 113

Section 2 = 71

Section 3 = 101

In section 3, I counted a dozen or so boys age 12 to 15 who were
described variously as coal miner, haulier, labourer or weigher in
a coal works etc.

Iron works

The 17 men involved in some aspect of iron workings are almost
all in section 2, and mainly lived in the Waun Leision / Lower Brynamman
area e.g Park StThe Amman Tin Works were not far away.

Further reading

In his extensive article detailed below, Hugh Thomas has covered all
these aspects of Llangiwg parish in great detail and it is a 'must
read' for anyone seriously interested in the parish's history

Population

The obvious change in the 20 years is the increase in the
hamlet's population which rose by c 60% from a total of 1586 to 2628, as
shown in the table below.

1871

1891

Total

Section 1

Section 2

Section 3

Total

Section 1

Section 2

Section 3

Households

341

107

132

102

507

126

203

178

Male

795

238

285

272

1377

286

590

501

Female

791

247

286

258

1251

273

536

442

Total pop.

1586

2628

Within the above totals, the total population in Section 2 just
about doubled, with Section 3 not far behind.

Section 1

Apart from Hendreforgan, Brynmorgan, Cwmllynfell, by far the largest
centre was Tir Owen Gwyn - the residents mostly being coal
miners.

Section 2

The large centres are now in Cannon Row, Park St, Glynbeudy, Waun
Leyshon and Mountain Cottages/Row. The main occupations in the first
three areas (Lower Brynamman) are coal and tin plate; the latter two areas
mainly coal - which fits in with proximity to local coal mines and / or
tin plate works.

Section 3

There were significant centres at Llwyncelyn, Cae-newydd, Pwllywrach
- with parts of Cwmgors village now having expanded significantly e.g
Llwynrhidie.Coal mining was by far the largest employer of men, in line
with the expansion of local collieries.

Shopkeepers

In the 1871 notes above I commented on the near absence of any commercial activities in
Section 3, I'm now able to report an explosion in this area !

Caegurwen shop - grocer and bootmaker

Caegurwen Arms - grocer

Gwauncaegurwen shop - butcher/grocer

Shop Terrace - green grocer

Pwllywrach - shoemaker

Pwllywrach - cabinet shopkeeper

Post Office - shoemaker & postmaster

Pwllywrach - toy shop

A place called Booksellers Shop with a coal miner living there

Commerce House - grocer & draper

Pwllywrach - woollen manufacturer

Old Gate House - milk vendor

Cwmgors - timber merchant

Cwmgors - grocer

Cwmgors - shop keeper

Temple of Fashion - Tom Howells' shop - tailor and draper at that
time but later to become the post office in Cwmgors